CJDNS & Hyperboria.

﻿Hyperboria is offered as a free private network that let's users get access to information sharing services without having their data monitored by third parties, something that in recent days has become a polemic and troublesome issue. For the tech savvy it also represents an alternative to the cumbersome ISP made protocols that have become outdated due to political and economic interests. If the trend continues it's highly possible that the Internet will become a highly corporate and controlled environment, which makes it ideal for economy but also opens up the door to censorship and abuse.﻿

The hacker community envision Hyperboria to grow as an alternative to the Internet which let's people connect freely and without worrying about their identities or information being stolen, while also providing a dynamic and "better" way to share information and access knowledge.

I'm making a brief foray into it with the hopes of furthering the network and the hacker vision into something that can be implemented globally, at least in my region.

Installing and configuring CJDNS.

Installing Hyperboria is relatively simple on a Linux machine, particularly Ubuntu where you only need to run the following commands [1]: